tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6885842.post2057751834910891745..comments2023-07-15T10:28:46.810+01:00Comments on Bovine TB: " DEFRA policy is essentially doing nothing."Richardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02561483930556493363noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6885842.post-83376412702571383772010-01-17T16:46:00.029+00:002010-01-17T16:46:00.029+00:00Given that the badger is so common, and that badge...Given that the badger is so common, and that badgers are by far the main source of the problem (otherwise the skin test would not have been so successful in eradicating bTB in the UK and elsewhere in the past) a hard nosed Government strategy that deals with the bTB problem is straightforward: <br />Change the Badger Act to allow control of badgers with certain rifles (as applies to deer), with an assurance of a future review - we don't want to eradicate badgers, and simultaneously get rid of (or gradually scale down) bTB compensation. <br />The result would be farmers taking responsibility for the financial impact of their own disease problems (including wildlife). Badgers on the land of uncooperative landowners could be culled by DEFRA officials, but on the whole the job would be done by farmers looking after their own financial interests.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6885842.post-37910921227147111992010-01-11T17:20:03.333+00:002010-01-11T17:20:03.333+00:00Thanks for your comment, Anon 12.22
We can't ...Thanks for your comment, Anon 12.22<br /><br />We can't say whether one 'strategy' works better than another. What GB is facing after years of prevarication, is a huge task of clearing out infection from the badger population, on a much wider scale than has been attempted before.<br />From the cattle testing data, it would appear that the Clean Ring (which you mentioned) worked extremely well, as did the complete clearance of badgers from Thornbury.<br />But everything started to crumble as successive sanitisation of what MAFF / DEFRA were allowed to do in response to confirmed TB outbreaks which did not involve cattle, was insidiously introduced from 1986 onwards - culminating in the moratorium of 1997 - 13 years ago.<br /><br />It is our understanding that (in the conspicuous absence of PCR) the identification of the location of these 'single hole setts', which you described, is proving useful. The main social group of badgers are perfectly capable of identifying and excluding one of their number who is either ill or old or both. All animals do it. And it is these 'dispersers' which the badgers themselves do not want, that often cause problems huge with the cattle.<br /><br />The key word which all politicians and thus Defra, will want to clutch, is 'tagetted'. Any policy which involves culling badgers has to 'targetted'. How do we do it?<br />Defra are hell bent on ignoring the cattle testing results, which are a pretty good indicator of where clean badgers reside, and they are dragging their collective feet on PCR. <br /><br />We agree re the removal of small groups of badgers. The RBCT did that with ours in 2000, in response to our neighbour's problems. This left us wide open to allcomers; the old the sick and the TB ridden, with the result that we went under restriction in 2001, and are still there.Matthewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09293505337441558637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6885842.post-58630966552323584152010-01-11T12:22:08.895+00:002010-01-11T12:22:08.895+00:00I worked for MAFF and Defra on the badger culling ...I worked for MAFF and Defra on the badger culling job for over 30 years. I worked on the gassing strategy, clean ring, live testing, badger removals and the very questionable Krebs trial. I can say with some authority and confidence that there isn't a sole out there that can tell when a sett is infected or a badger is infected with bTB just by looking at the runs, latrines, claw marks and spoil heaps. The only steady indicator of a diseased badger is when they occupy single hole setts, and even then it doesn't mean it has bTB, it could just be old or ill. I know the person who perports to have this unique knowledge and is currently advising farmers on what to do and he plays on their fears and desperation. Ask any farmer what he wants done when he has TB restrictions and he will say - kill the badgers ! Whilst I don't disagree with targetted culling, I do disagree with the advice this man is giving to the farmning community. He is playing on their fears, making false promises and giving them false hope. He is also suggesting, off the record of course, that they should take actions into their own hands by "removing " their badgers. This advice is dangerous, unproven and could never be acceptable to anybody with a shred of knowledge on badger ecology or habits. Removing badgers on a local scale will never work because you will always leave a vacuum, allowing other badgers to fill it, perhaps more infectious ones ! Targetted, large scale culling with maybe vaccination of the surrounding areas should be the way forward, not isolated, illegal removal as is happening now. This has been happening in Cornwall for years on a small scale and what good has it done ? Made it worse I can tell you !! Will nobody ever learn from the mistakes of others ?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com